9 minute read

zwitterionic cryoprotectant

Takeru Ishizaki, Yasuto Takeuchi, Kojiro Ishibashi, Noriko Gotoh, Eishu Hirata, Kosuke Kuroda, Scientific Reports 13, no.

37, 02 Jan. 2023, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-02223913-3, accessed 06 Jan. 2023.

Abstract

Cryopreservation of tissues is a tough challenge. Cryopreservation is categorized into slow-freezing and vitrification, and vitrification has recently been recognized as a suitable method for tissue cryopreservation. On the contrary, some researchers have reported that slow-freezing also has potential for tissue cryopreservation. Although conventional cryoprotectants have been studied well, some novel ones may efficiently cryopreserve tissues via slow-freezing. In this study, we used aqueous solutions of an emerging cryoprotectant, an artificial zwitterion supplemented with a conventional cryoprotectant, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), for cell spheroids. The zwitterion/DMSO aqueous solutions produced a better cryoprotective effect on cell spheroids, which are the smallest units of tissues, compared to that of a commercial cryoprotectant. Cryopreservation with the zwitterion/DMSO solutions not only exhibited better cell recovery but also maintained the functions of the spheroids effectively. The optimized composition of the solution was 10 wt% zwitterion, 15 wt% DMSO, and 75 wt% water. The zwitterion/DMSO solution gave a higher number of living cells for the cryopreservation of mouse tumor tissues than a commercial cryoprotectant. The zwitterion/DMSO solution was also able to cryopreserve human tumor tissue, a patientderived xenograft.

From the Introduction (lightly edited)

Efficient long-term preservation of tissues is a tough challenge, and novel technologies for the long-term preservation of various tissues are in high demand. Cryopreservation is a key technology for long-term preservation and has already been well established for single dispersed cells. Cells are generally cryopreserved in a deep freezer at around 80 °C or in liquid nitrogen at 196 °C. Cryoprotective agents (CPAs) have been developed to prevent physical damage to cells induced by ice crystals formed under extremely low temperature. The most commonly used CPAs are glycerol and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). Although some papers have reported cryopreservation of multicellular spheroids and tissues using these CPAs with a certain degree of cell viability, generally, cryopreservation is inadequate for multicellular systems.

Cryopreservation is categorized into slow-freezing and vitrification. Slow-freezing has a low cooling rate and prevents intracellular ice formation (IIF) by dehydration of cells. Slowfreezing is widely used for dispersed single cells because it works even with low concentrations of toxic CPAs and the amateur skills of the operator. Vitrification has a high cooling rate and prevents IIF by the instantaneous formation of a glass-like structure. Although it requires high concentrations of toxic CPAs and expert skills, it has recently attracted attention because it completely avoids ice crystal formation. In addition, vitrification leads to low volume change at low temperatures, avoiding compression of the tissues. Based on these advantages, vitrification is recognized to be suitable for the cryopreservation of tissues. Slow-freezing of tissues has not, therefore, been enthusiastically studied in recent years, though recently it was reported that slow-freezing is superior for cryopreservation of ovarian tissues. Kosuke Kuroda of Kanazawa University and colleagues considered that slowfreezing has untapped potential. In their study, the emerging CPAs were applied to harness this potential, because conventional CPAs have already been well studied.

They proposed low-molecular-weight, aprotic synthetic zwitterions as novel CPAs for slow-freezing. Zwitterions have positive and negative charges in one molecule. The synthetic ones that are applicable to cryopreservation possess various cations such as imidazolium, ammonium, and pyridinium and anions such as carboxylate and sulfonate. They have low cytotoxicity. For example, after 24 hours the zwitterion did not kill zebrafish embryos at 5% but the same concentration of DMSO killed most of them. The zwitterions the researchers synthesized are aprotic, thus basically always possess electric charges unlike protic zwitterions such as amino acids. The constant electric charges strongly interact with water, resulting in the inhibition of ice crystallization. Therefore, the zwitterions show a similar effect to that of commercial CPA for single cells. Although synthetic zwitterionic polymers and natural zwitterions as CPAs have been studied in detail, low-molecular-weight synthetic zwitterions have not been well studied.

The synthetic zwitterions are cell-impermeable CPAs and cannot inhibit IIF directly, unlike cell-permeable natural zwitterions; however, they increase the osmolarity of the freezing medium and indirectly inhibit IIF by dehydrating cells due to the high osmotic pressure. Moreover, their cryoprotective effect is improved by the supplementation of cell-permeable DMSO. In a preliminary study, the researchers demonstrated that some aqueous mixtures of zwitterion/DMSO showed a higher cryoprotective effect than a commercial CPA on a variety of single dispersed cells vulnerable to freezing. In the present study, the zwitterion/DMSO aqueous solutions were applied to the cryopreservation of tissues. Tumor tissues were used for this primitive study because of convenience. While there are many zwitterion species, the researchers used the imidazolium/ carboxylate zwitterion (called OE2imC3C in their previous works) because it is a promising species.

Base-edited CAR T cells for combinational therapy against T Cell malignancies

Christos Georgiadis, Jane Rasaiyaah, Soragia Athina Gkazi, Roland Preece, Aniekan Etuk, Abraham Christi, Waseem Qasim,

Leukemia 35, 3466–3481, 25 May 2021, https://www.nature. com/articles/s41375-021-01282-6, accessed 25 Dec. 2022.

Abstract

Targeting T cell malignancies using chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells is hindered by ‘T v T’ fratricide against shared antigens such as CD3 and CD7. Base editing offers the possibility of seamless disruption of gene expression of problematic antigens through creation of stop codons or elimination of splice sites. We describe the generation of fratricide-resistant T cells by orderly removal of TCR/CD3 and CD7 ahead of lentiviral-mediated expression of CARs specific for CD3 or CD7. Molecular interrogation of base-edited cells confirmed elimination of chromosomal translocations detected in conventional Cas9 treated cells. Interestingly, 3CAR/7CAR co-culture resulted in ‘selfenrichment’ yielding populations 99.6% TCR−/CD3−/CD7−. 3CAR or 7CAR cells were able to exert specific cytotoxicity against leukaemia lines with defined CD3 and/or CD7 expression as well as primary T-ALL cells. Co-cultured 3CAR/7CAR cells exhibited highest cytotoxicity against CD3 + CD7 + T-ALL targets in vitro and an in vivo human:murine chimeric model. While APOBEC editors can reportedly exhibit guide-independent deamination of both DNA and RNA, we found no problematic ‘off-target’ activity or promiscuous base conversion affecting CAR antigen-specific binding regions, which may otherwise redirect T cell specificity. Combinational infusion of fratricide-resistant anti-T CAR T cells may enable enhanced molecular remission ahead of allo-HSCT for T cell malignancies.

(Editor’s note: The following article, applying results of the above study, had no published, peer-reviewed study of its own at time of writing; the above is the closest approach I could find. – RMP)

From: World-first use of base-edited CAR T-cells to treat resistant leukaemia

University College London News (unattributed), 12 Dec. 2022, https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2022/dec/world-first-use-baseedited-car-t-cells-treat-resistant-leukaemia, accessed 25 Dec. 2022.

A patient with relapsed T-cell leukaemia has been given baseedited T-cells in a world-first use of a base-edited cell therapy, in a ‘bench-to-bedside’ collaboration between UCL and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children (GOSH).

The patient, 13-year-old Alyssa from Leicester, was diagnosed with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (T-ALL) in 2021. She was treated with all current conventional therapies for her blood cancer, including chemotherapy and a bone marrow transplant, but unfortunately her disease came back and there were no further treatment options.

Alyssa was the first patient to be enrolled onto the TvT clinical trial and in May 2022 she was admitted to the Bone Marrow

Transplant (BMT) Unit at GOSH, to receive ‘universal’ CAR T-cells that had been pre-manufactured from a healthy volunteer donor. These cells had been edited using new base-editing technology, which was designed and developed by a team of researchers at UCL, led by Professor Waseem Qasim (UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health), who is also an Honorary Consultant at GOSH.

She was then fitted with a Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) to allow them to hunt down and kill cancerous T-cells without attacking each other.

Just 28 days later, Alyssa was in remission and went on to receive a second bone marrow transplant to restore her immune system. Now, six-months post-BMT, she is doing well at home recovering with her family and continues her post-BMT followup at GOSH. Without this experimental treatment, Alyssa’s only option was palliative care.

Researchers are presenting the data for the first time at the American Society of Haematology annual meeting in New Orleans, USA, this weekend.

Professor Waseem Qasim, Professor of Cell and Gene Therapy at UCL GOS ICH and Consultant Immunologist at GOSH said: “We designed and developed the treatment from lab to clinic and are now trialling it on children from across the UK – in a unique bench to bedside approach.

“Alyssa’s story is a great demonstration of how, with expert teams and infrastructure, we can link cutting edge technologies in the lab with real results in the hospital for patients. It’s our most sophisticated cell engineering so far and paves the way for other new treatments and ultimately better futures for sick children.

“We have a unique and special environment here at GOSH and UCL that allows us to rapidly scale up new technologies and we’re looking forward to continuing our research and bringing it to the patients who need it most.”

Cerebrospinal fluid immune dysregulation during healthy brain aging and cognitive impairment

Natalie Piehl, Lynn van Olst, Abhirami Ramakrishnan, Victoria Teregulova, Brooke Simonton, Ziyang Zhang, Emma Tapp, Divya Channappa, Hamilton Oh, Patricia M. Losada, Jarod Rutledge, Alexandra N. Trelle, Elizabeth C. Mormino, Fanny Elahi, Douglas R. Galasko, Victor W. Henderson, Anthony D. Wagner, Tony Wyss-Coray, David Gate, Cell 185(26), 22 Dec. 2022, https://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(22)014635, accessed 1 Jan. 2023.

Summary

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) contains a tightly regulated immune system. However, knowledge is lacking about how CSF immunity is altered with aging or neurodegenerative disease. Here, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing on CSF from 45 cognitively normal subjects ranging from 54 to 82 years old. We uncovered an upregulation of lipid transport genes in monocytes with age. We then compared this cohort with 14 cognitively impaired subjects. In cognitively impaired subjects, downregulation of lipid transport genes in monocytes occurred concomitantly with altered cytokine signaling to CD8 T cells. Clonal CD8 T effector memory cells upregulated C-X-C motif chemokine receptor 6 (CXCR6) in cognitively impaired subjects. The CXCR6 ligand, C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 16 (CXCL16), was elevated in the CSF of cognitively impaired subjects, suggesting CXCL16-CXCR6 signaling as a mechanism for antigen-specific T cell entry into the brain. Cumulatively, these results reveal cerebrospinal fluid immune dysregulation during healthy brain aging and cognitive impairment.

Graphical abstract

From: New immune culprit discovered in Alzheimer’s disease

Marla Paul, Northwestern Medicine News Center, 13 Dec. 2022, https://news.feinberg.northwestern.edu/2022/12/13/newimmune-culprit-discovered-in-alzheimers-disease/, accessed 1 Jan. 2023.

The reason your three-pound brain doesn’t feel heavy is because it floats in a reservoir of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which flows in and around your brain and spinal cord. This liquid barrier between your brain and skull protects it from a hit to your head and bathes your brain in nutrients.

is drastically different from healthy individuals, the study also discovered.

“We now have a glimpse into the brain’s immune system with healthy aging and neurodegeneration,” Gate said. “This immune reservoir could potentially be used to treat inflammation of the brain or be used as a diagnostic to determine the level of brain inflammation in individuals with dementia.”

“We provide a thorough analysis of this important immunologic reservoir of the healthy and diseased brain,” Gate said. His team is sharing the data publicly, and its results can be searched online.

To analyze the CSF, Gate’s team at Northwestern used a sophisticated technique called single-cell RNA sequencing. They profiled 59 CSF immune systems from a spectrum of ages by taking CSF from participants’ spines and isolating their immune cells.

The first part of the study looked at CSF in 45 healthy individuals aged 54 to 83 years. The second part of the study compared those findings in the healthy group to CSF in 14 adults with cognitive impairment, as determined by their poor scores on memory tests.

Gate’s team of scientists observed genetic changes in the CSF immune cells in older healthy individuals that made the cells appear more activated and inflamed with advanced age.

“The immune cells appear to be a little angry in older individuals,” Gate said. “We think this anger might make these cells less functional, resulting in dysregulation of the brain’s immune system.”

In the cognitively impaired group, inflamed T-cells cloned themselves and flowed into the CSF and brain as if they were following a radio signal, Gate said. Scientists found the cells had an overabundance of a cell receptor — CXCR6 — that acts as an antenna. This receptor receives a signal — CXCL16 — from the degenerating brain’s microglia cells to enter the brain.

But the CSF has another critical, if less known, function: it also provides immune protection to the brain. Yet, this function hasn’t been well studied.

A Northwestern Medicine study of CSF published in the journal Cell, has discovered its role in cognitive impairment, such as Alzheimer’s disease. This discovery provides a new clue to the process of neurodegeneration, said study lead author David Gate, PhD, assistant professor in the Ken and Ruth Davee Department of Neurology.

The study found that as people age, their CSF immune system becomes dysregulated. In people with cognitive impairment, such as those with Alzheimer’s disease, the CSF immune system

“It could be the degenerating brain activates these cells and causes them to clone themselves and flow to the brain,” Gate said. “They do not belong there, and we are trying to understand whether they contribute to damage in the brain.”

Gate said his “future goal is to block that radio signal, or to inhibit the antenna from receiving that signal from the brain. We want to know what happens when these immune cells are blocked from entering brains with neurodegeneration.”